Devora Cohen protects the ballfrom Shira Schreiber at a recent practice. A local day school tries to get its girls' basketball program rolling. 12/4 1998 72 Detroit Jewish News LONNY GOLDSMITH StaffWriter A kiva Hebrew Day School may be the least likely school in the area to be building a girls' basketball program. But sure enough, they are trying. With the support of boys' varsity coach Ken Kohn and the Akiva administration, the Orthodox school unveiled its girls' high school team this year, to go with its middle school girls' team, which is in its sec- ond year. "I started coaching the middle school team because of my daughter, Rachel," Kohn said. "The main reason I do it is because the kids have so much school and so little physical education." Kohn made the decision this year to sacrifice teaching the basic skills for teaching the game. "The long-term plan is to spend time with the younger girls on skills and the var- sity girls on play- ing," he said. "We have to try to cre- ate a system and let them trust it. We're looking a couple of years down the road. "The other trick is for them to keep learning when they are losing badly." Thus far, Akiva has not fared well in its rookie season, but the players are undeterred by the setbacks. "We all want to win, and get frus- trated when we don't," said 1 1 th grad- er Esther Feld, who came to Akiva this year after playing at an all-girls day school in New Jersey. "I've played on other teams and won, so I know whams it's like. It's a great feeling." According to Akiva's principal, Rabbi Karmi Gross, the game results don't matter. "I don't care if they win. That's not what we want them to get out of it," he said. "I'm proud of the girls, the way they walk away from it and that they don't look at it as not worthwhile because they didn't win." Kohn sees the future as promising c= because of the large number of ninth- graders on the team and having a few players with experience. Tenth-grader Audrey Kleiman and ninth-grader Rachel Kohn both played on the Detroit Maccabi team this summer. "I think that Rachel and I can help the team in that respect," Kleiman said. "Being an inexperienced team isn't so bad because Ken [Kohn] helps me learn more about basketball." Kleiman said, "Not winning isn't difficult to handle. We just have fun when we play. Besides, I'm used to it." Shira Schreiber, a ninth-grader who played on the middle school team last year, sees the varsity ream getting bet- ter. "Losing gets frustrating, but I see improvement," she said. "It gives us hope for the next game." The hard part for Kohn is schedul- ing competition. can't find reams that won't wipe us out," he said. He scheduled an 11-game season for the varsity. Their first test against another day school team comes this weekend, when the Columbus (Ohio) Torah Academy boys' and girls' teams come for two games apiece against their Akiva counterparts. In February, -Akiva will travel to the Community Hebrew Academy of Toronto. (CHAT) tournament, where they'll play four games, and to Bet Sepher Mizrachi in Cleveland for two games. The boys' and girls' teams will Akiva Coach Ken Kohn